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Lots of mine haven't many seeds!
I've saved black and brown boar and just bagged 6 seeds each and the Berkeley tie-dye the same.
4 per bag will be fine if you are struggling? Let's hope for a couple of weeks of sun. We seem to have moved swiftly to Autumn. September is usually a good month for me.
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Originally posted by Scarlet View PostLots of mine haven't many seeds!
I've saved black and brown boar and just bagged 6 seeds each and the Berkeley tie-dye the same.
4 per bag will be fine if you are struggling? Let's hope for a couple of weeks of sun. We seem to have moved swiftly to Autumn. September is usually a good month for me.
& Marizol Gold
Neither as big as I would normally expect.
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Parthenocarpy can happen at high temperatures,the heat has affected some of my tomato size,some small tomatoes mixed with big tomatoes & quite a few aborted flowers,I found this -
“Plants grown at 26 C had a poor appearance and by the end of the experiment approx. 40% of the terminal meristems were blind. Trusses tended to be abnormal; some aborted while others had reduced bud numbers. There was poor fruit set and fruits tended to be either parthenocarpic (seedless) or have low seed numbers. Plants grown at 22 C and 18 C produced normal fruits and had a normal canopy structure, whereas growth was greatly reduced at 14 C and trusses had many flowers and were prone to splitting. Furthermore, at this temperature fruits were parthenocarpic, small, hard and of no marketable value.”
https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/...5G5CRDK6RD3PGALast edited by Jungle Jane; 08-09-2019, 07:05 PM.Location : Essex
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Originally posted by MelanieSW View PostI'm very pleased with my Sun Baby cherry tomatoes this year.
Vigorous growth (the plants needed 2 stakes each), open pollinated, and tasty. And laden with fruit, even though I just let them do their thing and didn't pinch out etc so it ended up more bush than cordon.
They were grown outdoors, from seed saved from a plant bought last year from my local diy store.
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I have found Sun Gold to be a far superior variety in terms of production, growth rate, taste, smell, looks etc. Of course Sun Gold probably goes into the top 3 on most people's lists in general.
So I won't be growing Sun Baby again next year. It's certainly not the worst tomato out there, but definitely not the best either. There's far better out there. In fact I wouldn't even put it in my top 10 this season. It might not even get into the top 15.
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Originally posted by The Pepper Man View PostOf course Sun Gold probably goes into the top 3 on most people's lists in general.
#and I won't buy F1 tomato seeds either.Last edited by Scarlet; 08-09-2019, 11:59 PM.
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Originally posted by Scarlet View PostJJ - I had lots of aborted flowers during the hot spell. Though I have been lucky with fruit size.
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Originally posted by The Pepper Man View PostI'm not a fan of the Sun Baby variety. It doesn't taste great, it doesn't produce a lot of fruit and it is also slow to ripen.
I have found Sun Gold to be a far superior variety in terms of production, growth rate, taste, smell, looks etc. Of course Sun Gold probably goes into the top 3 on most people's lists in general.
So I won't be growing Sun Baby again next year. It's certainly not the worst tomato out there, but definitely not the best either. There's far better out there. In fact I wouldn't even put it in my top 10 this season. It might not even get into the top 15.
It produced a big crop for me, and the fruit tastes best if it gets a lot of sun - as the name implies.Location: London
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